Tag: Summer Institutes 2026

Series of educator professional development options at the Windward Institute for Summer 2026

  • 2-DAY MATH INSTITUTE – From Fluency to Acceleration: Building Strong Foundations and Responsive Math Instruction

    Adaptable to your schedule! Join us for an individual session or both days.

    Date: July 13 and 14
    Presenters: Brian Poncy, PhD
    Grades: 2-5
    Location: Virtual
    Credits: NYCTLE credits – 3 hours per full-day workshop, 6 hours for full institute

    This two-day experience helps educators build strong math foundations through fluency and respond effectively to student needs. Day 1 focuses on embedding Tier 1 practices that promote accuracy, efficiency, and deeper understanding, while Day 2 centers on using data to match and adjust interventions. Together, the sessions provide practical tools to support all students in making meaningful progress.

    Day 1: From Fluency to Impact: Strengthening Math Foundations Through Practice and Tier 1 Support

    Description

    How do students move from basic understanding to confident, flexible problem solving in math? It starts with fluency. In this session, we’ll explore why accuracy and efficiency with foundational skills matter and how fluency supports deeper learning by reducing cognitive load, increasing practice opportunities, and strengthening retention. Participants will then translate research into action by planning practical Tier 1 routines that build fluency, align across grade levels, and support all learners.

    Key Learning Objectives

    • explain why fluency matters and how it supports student learning, retention, and transfer
    • connect fluency to deeper math understanding and success with more complex concepts
    • apply practical Tier 1 strategies to build fluency within daily instruction
    • use assessment to identify student needs and monitor progress
    • plan for aligned and sustainable implementation across classrooms and grade levels

    Day 2: From Matching to Momentum: Using Data to Select and Strengthen Math Interventions

    Description:

    How can we ensure we’re choosing the right intervention—and know what to do when it’s not working? This session supports educators in using data to both match instruction to student needs and make thoughtful adjustments when progress stalls. Participants will explore the Instructional Hierarchy as a practical framework for identifying where students are in their learning (acquisition, fluency, generalization, adaptation) and selecting targeted strategies to support them. Then, we’ll build on this foundation with a clear, step-by-step problem-solving process to troubleshoot non-responders—examining factors like skill selection, instructional approach, practice opportunities, and student engagement. Teachers will leave with concrete tools and routines to confidently adjust instruction and accelerate student progress.

    Key Learning Objectives

    • use the Instructional Hierarchy to identify student skill stages and match appropriate interventions
    • select and apply targeted strategies (e.g., structured practice routines) to build accuracy, fluency, and generalization
    • use a data-based problem-solving process to identify why a student may not be responding to intervention
    • adjust instruction strategically by examining skill alignment, instructional methods, practice (dose), and task difficulty
    • set goals and monitor progress to evaluate effectiveness and ensure students are making meaningful gains

     

  • Multisensory Reading Instruction: PAF Summer 2026

    Date: July 13, 14, and July 15, 2026, 9:00 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. ET
    Instructor: Colleen McGlynn, MsEd & Alison Leveque, PhD.
    Grades: K-8
    Location: In-person at the Windward Westchester Lower School Campus in White Plains, NY or virtual Price: $675 (PAF Manuals Included)
    Credentials: 16.5 Approved CTLE Hours

    Description:
    The Multisensory Reading Instruction: PAF Reading Program is a systematic, structured program for teaching reading, spelling, and handwriting. It emphasizes explicit, multisensory techniques highlighted by the National Reading Panel (2000) and supporting research and incorporates the theories and practices of Orton-Gillingham instruction. This program is applicable for all students when started in the early elementary grades and as an intervention program for struggling readers.

    Key Learning Objectives:

    • Understand the current research on the instructional methodologies that supports reading development
    • Learn a comprehensive instructional sequence that teaches a systematic approach to word reading, spelling, fluency, and comprehension
    • Practice planning daily lessons incorporating PAF strategies and resources
    • Incorporate curriculum-based assessments to evaluate student progress and plan for instruction
  • 4-DAY MATH INSTITUTE: Building Structure, Fluency, and Mathematical Reasoning

    Adaptable to your schedule! 

    Join us for this four-day institute with leading researchers in math instruction. Create a personalized learning experience by attending a single session or the full institute.

    Dates: July 20-23, 9:00 am- 12:00 pm EST
    Location: Virtual
    Credits: NYCTLE credits – 3 hours per workshop

     

    Day 1: Mathematics Vocabulary: What do words have to do with it?

    Presenter: Elizabeth Stevens, PhD

    Description:
    Mathematics vocabulary can be challenging for students, especially those with mathematics difficulty, because so many terms carry multiple meanings both across subjects and within math itself. Yet research consistently shows that strong math vocabulary is tightly linked to stronger math performance, making it essential for helping students communicate their thinking, make sense of word problems, and engage confidently with new content. This session invites teachers to dig into the complexity of math language, explore different types of vocabulary, and understand why using precise terms (like numerator instead of “top number”) truly matters. Educators will learn how to identify high‑impact words using a database of critical math terms, and learn five practical instructional routines designed to make vocabulary instruction more powerful and engaging. Through hands‑on practice, collaborative planning, and ready‑to‑use digital resources, teachers will leave equipped to strengthen students’ mathematical language and elevate classroom discourse.

    Key Learning Objectives:

    • Explain why mathematics vocabulary knowledge supports understanding of mathematics concepts
    • Explain how to prioritize terms for instruction
    • Identify and learn practices for teaching and reviewing mathematics vocabulary
    • Plan ways to implement and apply content learned in your instructional setting (e.g., classroom, small group, coaching)

     

     Day 2: A Structured Approach to Solve Addition Math Word Problems

    Presenter: Elizabeth Hughes, PhD

    Description:
    This session introduces participants to the principles of schema-based instruction, an approach that helps students make sense of word problems by recognizing underlying mathematical structures rather than relying on superficial keywords. We will explore the major additive problem types, including join, separate, part–part–whole, and compare, and discuss how to guide students in identifying these structures across varied contexts. Participants will learn how to use visual models to represent thinking, support problem comprehension, and strengthen conceptual understanding. The session will also include a brief introduction to worked examples as an effective tool for building clarity and reducing cognitive load as students internalize problem schemas.

    Key Learning Objectives:

    • understand what schema-based instruction is and why it supports deeper mathematical comprehension
    • identify and explore the four major additive problem types
    • gain strategies for helping students recognize problem structure rather than relying on keywords
    • gain practical ways to use visual models to represent thinking and support problem-solving
    • explore how worked examples can build conceptual clarity and reduce cognitive load for learners

     

    Day 3: The Power of Structure: Understanding Multiplicative Thinking

    Presenter: Jonté Meyers, PhD

    Description:
    This session will deepen participants’ understanding of multiplicative reasoning and how it differs fundamentally from additive reasoning. We will explore key multiplicative structures, including equal groups, comparison situations using “times as many,” arrays and fundamental differences, rate problems, to build a solid conceptual foundation. Participants will examine how students form composite units and why this shift in thinking is essential for fluent multiplication and division. The session will highlight a range of representations that make multiplicative structure visible, supporting stronger reasoning and problem solving. Finally, we will look at worked examples that clearly connect visual models to procedures, helping learners internalize the logic behind efficient strategies.

    Key Learning Objectives:

    • understanding how multiplicative reasoning fundamentally differs from additive reasoning, and why this shift matters for students’ mathematical development
    • familiarity with major multiplicative structures, including equal groups, “times as many” comparison problems, arrays/area models, and rate situations
    • insight into how learners build composite units and how to support this critical cognitive move
    • strategies for using representations that reveal multiplicative structure, helping students see and make sense of relationships
    • explore worked examples that connect visual models to formal procedures, building conceptual and procedural fluency

     

    Day 4: The Science of Math: Turning Research into High-Impact Classroom Practices

    Presenter: Paul Riccomini, PhD

    Description:
    This workshop covers spaced learning, varied practice types, and information recall, three evidence-based methods to enhance student learning. Educators will receive frameworks and develop a clear understanding of the scientific principles underlying these approaches. Participants will examine cognitive processes that support long-term retention and acquire techniques to deepen students’ understanding and application of math knowledge. Through interactive activities and collaborative planning, educators will learn to incorporate these strategies into mathematics instruction.

    Key Learning

    • explain key cognitive processes related to memory and retention within math concepts
    • identify and understand the research supported techniques of Spaced learning, Interleaved Practice, and Practice Test Retrieval
    • analyze how retention strategies can vertically align with K–12 mathematics instruction
    • apply evidence-based techniques to authentic classroom scenarios by designing lesson components, tasks, and review routines
    • gain a toolkit of instructional scaffolds that integrate into math lessons